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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Osteoclast-mediated bone resorption is increased in response to 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25[OH]2D or calcitriol).
Osteopetrosis
is a metabolic bone disease characterized by defective, osteoclast-mediated bone resorption, which co-exists with elevated serum 1,25-(OH)2D levels in some osteopetrotic children and animals. We examined the effects of high doses of calcitriol on osteoclast number and cytochemistry in both normal and osteopetrotic (os) rabbits. Calcitriol was continuously infused at doses of 0.5, 2.5, or 25 micrograms/kg/day via subcutaneously implanted osmotic minipumps for a period of 7 days. Following treatment, the proximal tibial metaphyses were processed for histomorphometric and cytochemical analyses. Sections were stained for tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TrAP) or acid
ATPase
(TraATPase). Osteoclasts were significantly reduced in untreated os rabbits compared with age-matched normal littermates between birth and 3 weeks of age (41-46% of normal). Whereas most normal osteoclasts (85%) stained heavily for TrAP or TraATPase, less than half of os osteoclasts were heavily stained for these acid hydrolases. Infusions of 1,25(OH)2D resulted in elevations of osteoclast numbers in both normal and os rabbits, but the number of osteoclasts remained significantly lower in mutants than in normal littermates at any given dose. Calcitriol infusions also resulted in a significant increase in the percentage of os osteoclasts staining heavily for TrAP and TraATPase. These results suggest that in response to 1,25(OH)2D normal osteoclasts increase their production of acid hydrolases before increasing cell numbers and that, in spite of high levels of endogenous calcitriol, os rabbits can respond to exogenous 1,25(OH)2D as evidenced by increased osteoclast number and cytochemical staining, even though these osteoclasts fail to resorb the excess skeletal matrix.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D on osteoclast number and cytochemistry in normal and osteopetrotic (os) rabbits. 214 52
Osteopetrosis
is a metabolic bone disease characterized by reduced bone resorption. From experimental studies of various osteopetrotic mutations has emerged the hypothesis that each is unique with respect to mechanisms whereby osteoclast development and/or function are reduced. The osteopetrotic (op) mutation in the rat was discovered in Fatty/ORL stock over a decade ago. The paucity of data about osteoclast biology in this mutation prompted this study of cytological, cytochemical, and ultrastructural features of osteoclasts. In op rats, osteoclasts are significantly reduced in number, but are larger and more vacuolated than in normal littermates. Mutant osteoclasts can form ruffled borders and clear zones, but their ability to fragment and excavate bone surfaces is greatly impaired. Cytoplasmic vacuoles in op osteoclasts are randomly distributed and greatly enlarged, and they stain weakly for two cytochemical characteristics of osteoclasts, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and acid
ATPase
. These findings suggest that an abnormality in the lysosomal/vacuolar system, an important component of the resorptive mechanism, may be involved in the interception of osteoclast function in this mutation.
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PMID:Osteoclast biology in the osteopetrotic (op) rat. 258 17
We have examined parameters of bone metabolism in a new mutation, microphthalmia blanc (mib), in the rat exhibiting a skeletal sclerosis at birth that improves with age. There were no significant differences in the rate of bone formation during the first postnatal month except a temporary reduction in mutants at 3 weeks that coincided with compromised nutrition at weaning. At birth the ruffled border in mutant osteoclasts was absent or poorly developed and mRNA analyses of mutant bone compared to normal bone showed significant reductions in the messages for the osteoclast-specific genes carbonic andydrase II and tartrate-resistant
ATPase
. These distinctive ultrastructural and molecular differences were not present 1 month later. These data show that the transient
osteopetrosis
in mib rats results from a perinatal reduction in ultrastructural and enzymatic features of active osteoclasts and is not complicated by elevations in bone formation. The molecular basis for both the production and resolution of these abnormalities deserves further study.
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PMID:Bone metabolism in the osteopetrotic rat mutation microphthalmia blanc. 765 71
Osteopetrosis
in laboratory animals is a metabolic bone disease characterized by increased skeletal mass. It is inherited as an autosomal recessive and results from a defect in the development and/or function of osteoclasts. We studied two enzymes essential for bone resorption, carbonic anhydrase II isoenzyme (CA II) and H+ -
ATPase
, in osteoclasts from four osteopetrotic mutations in the rat; namely incisors-absent (ia),
osteopetrosis
(op), toothless (tl), and microphthalmia (mib), to test the hypothesis that reduced bone resorption in one or more of these mutations results from defects in the synthesis or activity of one of these enzymes. CA II was present in most osteoclasts from normal, tl, op, and mib littermates and was homogeneously distributed in cytoplasm. CA II staining in ia osteoclasts was more variable and less intense than in the other mutations. H+-
ATPase
was also present in osteoclasts from normal animals and mutants and immunostaining showed clear polarization to the ruffled border region in all normal rats and mutants except ia, which showed diffuse distribution of staining in the cytoplasm. H+-
ATPase
activity (proton transport) in a related tissue, kidney, was normal in tl and ia rats but increased in op and mib rats compared to their normal littermates. These results suggest that the osteoclasts in osteopetrotic rat mutations are not abnormal with respect to the distribution of CA II and H+ -
ATPase
and that the function of these enzymes in the skeleton, while likely normal, needs to be tested directly in bone.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase II and H+ -ATPase in osteoclasts of four osteopetrotic mutations in the rat. 993 Aug 84
Although the gene defects for several mouse mutants with severe
osteopetrosis
are known, the genes underlying human infantile malignant recessive
osteopetrosis
remain elusive.
Osteopetrosis
is thought to be caused by a defect in osteoclast function. These cells degrade bone material in a tightly sealed extracellular compartment that is acidified by a vacuolar (V)-type H(+)-
ATPase
. Genes encoding components of the acidification machinery are candidate genes for
osteopetrosis
. In five of ten patients with infantile malignant osteopetrosis, we now demonstrate five different mutations in OC116, the gene encoding the a3 subunit of the V-
ATPase
from osteoclasts. Two independent patients were homozygous for mutations that predict a total loss of function by severely truncating the protein. By affecting a splice site, another homozygous mutation deletes 14 amino acids within the N-terminus, which interacts with other subunits of the proton pump. On the other hand, in four patients no mutations were found, and one patient from a consanguineous family did not show homozygosity at the OC116 locus, suggesting that mutations in at least one different gene may underlie
osteopetrosis
. Our work shows that mutations in the gene encoding the a3 subunit of the proton pump are a rather common cause of infantile
osteopetrosis
and suggests that this disease is genetically heterogeneous.
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PMID:Mutations in the a3 subunit of the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase cause infantile malignant osteopetrosis. 1094 35
The diagnosis and classification of renal tubular acidosis (RTA) have traditionally been made on the basis of functional studies. On these grounds, RTA has been separated into three main categories: (1) proximal RTA, or type 2; (2) distal RTA, or type 1; and (3) hyperkalemic RTA, or type 4. In recent years significant advances have been made in our understanding of the subcellular mechanisms involved in renal bicarbonate (HCO3-) and H+ transport. Application of molecular biology techniques has also opened a completely new perspective to the understanding of the pathophysiology of inherited cases of RTA. Mutations in the gene SLC4A4, encoding Na+-HCO3- cotransporter (NBC-1), have been found in proximal RTA with ocular abnormalities; in the gene SLC4A1, encoding Cl(-)-HCO3- exchanger (AE1), in autosomal dominant distal RTA; in the gene ATP6B1, encoding B1 subunit of H+-
ATPase
, in autosomal recessive distal RTA with sensorineural deafness; and in the gene CA2, encoding carbonic anhydrase II, in autosomal recessive
osteopetrosis
. Syndromes of aldosterone resistance have been also characterized molecularly and mutations in the gene MLR, encoding mineralocorticoid receptor, and in the genes SNCC1A, SNCC1B, and SCNN1G, encoding subunits of the epithelial Na+ channel, have been found in dominant and recessive forms of pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1, respectively. It can be concluded that, although functional studies are still necessary, a new molecular era in the understanding of disorders of renal acidification has arrived.
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PMID:New insights into the pathogenesis of renal tubular acidosis--from functional to molecular studies. 1104
Eukaryotes possess multiple isoforms of the a subunit of the V(0) complex of vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPases (V-ATPases). Mutations in the V-
ATPase
a3 isoform have recently been shown to result in
osteopetrosis
, a fatal disease in humans, but no function has yet been ascribed to other isoforms. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the unc-32 mutant was originally isolated on the basis of its movement defect. We have isolated four new mutant alleles, the strongest of which is embryonic lethal. We show here that unc-32 corresponds to one of the four genes encoding a V-
ATPase
a subunit in the nematode, and we present their expression patterns and a molecular analysis of the gene family. unc-32 gives rise via alternative splicing to at least six transcripts. In the uncoordinated alleles, the transcript unc-32 B is affected, suggesting that it encodes an isoform that is targeted to synaptic vesicles of cholinergic neurons, where it would control neurotransmitter uptake or release. Other isoforms expressed widely during embryogenesis are mutated in the lethal alleles and would be involved in other acidic organelles. Our results indicate that V-
ATPase
a subunit genes are highly regulated and have tissue-specific function.
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PMID:The Caenorhabditis elegans unc-32 gene encodes alternative forms of a vacuolar ATPase a subunit. 1111 Jul 98
The primary or hereditary form of distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA), although rare, has received increased attention recently because of dramatic advances in the understanding of its genetic basis. The final regulation of renal acid excretion is effected by various acid/base transporters localized in specialized cells in the cortical collecting and outer medullary collecting tubules. Inherited defects in two of the key acid/base transporters involved in distal acidification, as well as mutations in the cytosolic carbonic anhydrase gene, can cause dRTA. The syndrome is inherited in both autosomal dominant and recessive patterns; patients with recessive dRTA present with either acute illness or growth failure at a young age, sometimes accompanied by deafness, whereas dominant dRTA is usually a milder disease and involves no hearing loss. The AE1 gene encodes two Cl-/HCO3- exchangers that are expressed in the erythrocyte and in the acid-secreting intercalated cells of the kidney. AE1 contributes to urinary acidification by providing the major exit route for HCO3- across the basolateral membrane. Several mutations in the AE1 gene cosegregate with dominant dRTA. The modest degree of hypofunction exhibited in vitro by these mutations, however, does not explain the abnormal distal acidification phenotype. Other AE1 mutations have been linked to a recessive syndrome of dRTA and hemolytic anemia in which hypofunction can be discerned by in vitro studies. Several mutations in the carbonic anyhdrase II gene are associated with the autosomal recessive syndrome of
osteopetrosis
, renal tubular acidosis, and cerebral calcification. Some of these individuals present with deafness of the conductive type. By contrast, more recent studies have shown that mutations in ATP6B1, encoding the B-subtype unit of the apical H(+)
ATPase
, are responsible for a group of patients with autosomal recessive dRTA associated with sensorineural deafness. Thus, the presence of deafness and the type provide an important clue to the genetic lesion underlying hereditary dRTA.
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PMID:Hereditary distal renal tubular acidosis: new understandings. 1116 Jul 90
Chloride channels play important roles in the plasma membrane and in intracellular organelles. Mice deficient for the ubiquitously expressed ClC-7 Cl(-) channel show severe
osteopetrosis
and retinal degeneration. Although osteoclasts are present in normal numbers, they fail to resorb bone because they cannot acidify the extracellular resorption lacuna. ClC-7 resides in late endosomal and lysosomal compartments. In osteoclasts, it is highly expressed in the ruffled membrane, formed by the fusion of H(+)-
ATPase
-containing vesicles, that secretes protons into the lacuna. We also identified CLCN7 mutations in a patient with human infantile malignant osteopetrosis. We conclude that ClC-7 provides the chloride conductance required for an efficient proton pumping by the H(+)-
ATPase
of the osteoclast ruffled membrane.
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PMID:Loss of the ClC-7 chloride channel leads to osteopetrosis in mice and man. 1120 62
The osteopetrotic grey-lethal (gl) mouse mutant displays many similarities to the human malignant autosomal-recessive form of
osteopetrosis
. In this study, we show that the gl osteopetrotic bone phenotype is characterized by the presence of numerous differentiated multinucleated osteoclasts. A significant increase in the number of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive osteoclasts was detected in vivo, suggesting induction of differentiation in the osteoclast lineage as a compensatory mechanism. These gl osteoclast cells demonstrated a defective cytoskeletal reorganization and an underdeveloped ruffled border, a membrane structure essential for active bone resorption. Accordingly, resorption activity of these cells is markedly impaired by four- to tenfold as evaluated with the pit formation assay. This low bone resorption in gl osteoclasts is highly reminiscent of the loss in key enzymes, V-
ATPase
or cathepsin-K, and in signaling factors, Src or TRAF-6, which were shown not to be significantly altered in gl osteoclasts. Thus, independently of a deficiency in V-
ATPase
, Src, cathepsin-K, and TRAF-6, the gl mutation results in increased number of osteoclasts, characterized by a disrupted cytoskeleton and an underdeveloped ruffled border.
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PMID:The mouse osteopetrotic grey-lethal mutation induces a defect in osteoclast maturation/function. 1134 51
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